Clustering of quasars in the First Year of the SDSS-IV eBOSS survey: Interpretation and halo occupation distribution [CEA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1612.06918


In current and future surveys, quasars play a key role. The new data will extend our knowledge of the Universe with new data which will be used to better constrain the cosmological model at redshift $z>1$ via baryon acoustic oscillation or modelling the redshift space distortion signal. Here, we present the first clustering study of the quasars observed by the extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey. We measure the clustering of $\sim 70,000$ quasars located in the redshift range $0.9<z<2.2$ that cover 1,168 deg$^2$. We model the clustering and produce high-fidelity quasar mock catalogues based on the BigMultiDark Planck simulation. In this aim, we use a modified (Sub)Halo Abundance Matching model to account for the specificities of the halo population hosting quasars. We find that quasars are hosted by halos with masses $\sim10^{12.7}M_\odot$ and their bias evolves from 1.54 ($z=1.06$) to 3.15 ($z=1.98$). Using the current eBOSS data, we cannot distinguish between models with different fraction of satellites. The high-fidelity mock light-cones, including properties of halos hosting quasars, are made publicly available.

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S. Rodriguez-Torres, J. Comparat, F. Prada, et. al.
Thu, 22 Dec 16
11/65

Comments: 13 page, 11 figures, 6 tables